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Rethinking
the Rhetoric
Sarah Zaman '05
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| photo:Les
Todd |
Pro-choice? Yes. Pro-abortion? Not really," wrote
Sarah Zaman on the opinion page of The Kansas City Star last February. "This
isn't just a question of terminology--this is how some college
kids feel.... We call ourselves 'pro-choice,' but our views are
grayer than the label suggests."
Indeed, for Zaman, a senior, it is the labels, not the concepts,
that have set the parameters for the current debate over abortion
and left little room for the nuanced views of a new generation. "I
was a lot more middle-ground than I thought," she says. "And
I can't speak for everyone, but I think a lot of college kids are
tired of the either-or rhetoric. It doesn't allow for meaningful
discussion. We always hear about [abortion] in terms of black and
white. And in class I was finding this gray area."
The class was Professor Kathy Rudy's "Genetic and Reproductive
Ethics," which Zaman took fall semester. It examines the frontiers
of genetic manipulation and reproductive therapies, and takes on
the ethical questions surrounding surrogate motherhood, abortion,
and cloning. One day, Zaman recalls, Rudy conducted a class exercise
in which she acted the part of an old pro-life friend. "We
had to explain and defend our pro-choice stance to her. We had
to figure out how to have that discussion without reaching dead
ends, and that meant acknowledging our own uncertainties."
After the class ended, Zaman says, Rudy urged her to keep going, "to
take what I was saying in class and do something with it. She said,
'Write an op-ed and send it out to papers.' So, I did. I went home
over Christmas break and wrote it, and I sent it to the Duke News
Service and asked them to send it to papers."
It was the sort of nudge Rudy, a two-time Distinguished Teaching
Award winner, is well known for giving. "I want them to know
the theories involved in the issue," she told Duke Dialogue
in 2000 after winning her second award. "But I don't want
them to deal with the issues abstractly."
In the weeks after Zaman's op-ed ran in The Kansas City Star, Raleigh's
News & Observer, and The Dallas Morning News, e-mail messages
flooded in--"from abortion-clinic nurses, Republican parliamentarians,
professors, veterans of the Roe v. Wade rallies, grandmothers in
their eighties," she says. "I managed to infuriate both
sides. But some people told me I'd actually articulated things
they'd been feeling for a long time."
Zaman, who'd never before written for publication, says the experience
was revelatory in a way nothing in her college career had ever
been. For all of her activities--she is pre-med, plays violin in
the Duke Symphony Orchestra, and volunteers in Duke's chapter of
the Red Cross--this was the first time she'd taken something from
the classroom directly into the world, in effect exporting a campus
dialogue far beyond the campus borders.
"It's pretty difficult," she says. "You have to
distill your argument to a single page. But it's very gratifying,
too. All of a sudden, it works. You're having an impact. You're
having conversations with people you'd never have talked to otherwise.
It makes me want to try it again. There are so many issues I could
tackle--Social Security, prenatal drug abuse, euthanasia.... Who
knows?"
--Patrick Adams
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